Man kills wife, self in Pa. hospice unit

Associated Press
Allentown Police respond to a murder-suicide Tuesday at Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, Pa. An elderly man shot and killed his 83-year-old wife in a hospice unit at the hospital then turned the gun on himself, authorities said.

An elderly man who shot and killed his 83-year-old wife in an eastern Pennsylvania hospice unit Tuesday, then committed suicide, had apparently decided he couldn’t live without her, authorities said.

Staff members heard gunshots on the fourth floor of Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown shortly after 1 p.m. When they entered the room where the shots were fired, they found Mildred Osman dead in her bed, along with the body of 86-year-old Elwood Osman, said Lehigh County District Attorney Jim Martin.

The shooting “preliminarily appears to be a murder-suicide,” Martin said.

Advertisement

James Geiger, senior vice president of the hospital, was asked at a news conference if Mildred Osman’s shooting death appeared to be a “mercy killing.”

“It’s a love story,” Geiger responded. “The elderly gentleman could not bear to see his wife suffering, and the family, I believe, have observed that he just could not envision living without her.” He said he didn’t know of any note left behind.

No other patients or staff members were harmed or threatened, and the hospital wasn’t evacuated, officials said.

“This is a very tragic event and our hearts go out to the family of the deceased and our Lehigh Valley Health Network colleagues who were involved,” said Chuck Lewis, the hospital’s senior vice president of external affairs.

No one witnessed the shooting, and the man gave hospital staff no indication that he was about to harm his wife, who had entered hospice more than a week ago, said police Capt. Glen Dorney.

“The first thing that drew their attention was the sound of the gunshot,” he said. “They heard a second gunshot and came to investigate.”

Like most hospitals, Lehigh Valley Hospital doesn’t use metal detectors to screen visitors, though wands are used when hospital security has reason to believe a patient has a weapon, Geiger said.